The Way of the Gods
jiro Arisuga. Though it came to him, in whom it had lain latent, hardly. But, perhaps for that reason, as is t
tripped them both: the spiri
h less frequently. And the small heart of the small girl wo
g, no more carry your samisen, and are grown too suddenly for your years a m
o laughed again, as he had use
o more!
a thousand y
a myriad ye
ebbles are
s to our
orn lord o
mn with that light in your face who never sang it before-whose f
spite of his gayety. "I am going to die for the emperor the great death! I am going to set my father free to pursue
ds will love you. And I. But who, then, will
, I promis
ill crept o
doubtfully, "if I ca
still
e custodians cannot drive it away from the tombs. And w
spered, in her
ayly tou
e like that
le girl, touching him, as flesh touches fle
as in a land where both the spirits which loved one an
ear, and he well in it-much of his absorption had passed away, and
hers, with bodies
maiden sho
oughts. Well, perhaps I am. Yet I shall wait for you here. I can do that. The gods may not accept your sacrifice for a time. They may not accept it at all. And there may be no war for yo
re suddenly become a man and she were still a little girl, "supp
uga laug
ait," sai
er I have
hen your spirit may come. It is cruel to wait, alwa
ier stil
ll the goddesses
ouched h
nd it to me soon-the
can die the great death, too, and s
on your lips? Shall little you experience that arch esctasy: your death-wound spurting your own warm blood into your own face? Then out, out, out into the eternal solitude and silen
y. Yet it was wonderful that his gentleness held here. She understo
humbly. "I spoke when I had not
ghed h
ch are all good. But when you speak of the things which are a man's, I look at
that he was not mu
I were happy together. And if you die, still caring for me, your spirit will come and touch me, as you said. That much I know. You
ess of glory, the moment the call comes! This we did not know, the madness of glory, and I had never thought to learn. But it has come, and it is greater than all love. Sh
efore. It never could be. As he had said,
O